Save
Psychology Y12
Attachment
3.4 Ainsworth’s ‘Strange Situation’
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Created by
Tara Alagoz
Visit profile
Cards (15)
The
strange
situation
The accepted
observational
testing Method for measuring
attachment
types
Cultural
Variations
Differences in
child-rearing
practices and attachment types between different
cultural
groupings
Cross-cultural
studies
Comparison of findings from people of different
cultures
Imposed etic
Using techniques that are only
relevant
to one culture to study and/or draw
conclusions
about another
the 3 different attachment types are…
Type A:
insecure
-
avoidant
(I don’t care)
Type B:
securely attached
(I trust you)
Type C:
insecure
-
resistant
(I don’t trust you)
When was Ainsworth’s original study?
Ainsworth
(
1978
)
What
were the findings of Ainsworth’s study?
Type A:
insecure
-
avoidant
(
15
%)
Type B:
securely
attached
(
70
%)
Type C:
insecure
-
resistant
(
15
%)
What are the strengths of Ainsworth’s study?
repeated
Consistently ->
reliable
also measures
parental
sensitivity
(sensitive responsiveness)
Inter-rater
reliability
What are the weaknesses of Ainsworth’s study?
Lacks
ecological validity
ignores the role of the
mother
unethical
ethnocentric
The seven stages of
Ainsworth’s
Study:
Infant is encourages to
explore
stranger
enters and interacts with the infant
mother
leaves and
stranger
stays
mother
returns and
stranger
leaves
mother
leaves and infant is left alone
instead of mother, stranger
returns
mother
re-enters
Ijzendoorn
&
Kroonenberg’s
Research looked at attachment types
1. Within (intra) different cultures
2. Across (inter) different cultures
View source
Ijzendoorn & Kroonenberg’s
Meta-analysis
(
1988
)
Looked at the results of the strange situation across
32
studies in
8
different countries, infants below the age of
2
years
View source
The most common (modal) attachment type was type
B
(secure) overall
67
% of infants are Type
B
View source
In
Germany
there was the highest proportion of Type A attachments (
avoidant
) at 35% compared to other cultures
View source
In
Japan
there was the high proportion of Type C attachments (resistant) at
27
% and even higher in Israel (
29
%)
View source
See similar decks
7.1.2 Ainsworth's Strange Situation
Edexcel A-Level Psychology > Unit 7: Child Psychology > 7.1 Attachment
67 cards
3.5.2 Types of Attachment
AQA A-Level Psychology > 3. Attachment > 3.5 Ainsworths Strange Situation
40 cards
4.3 Psychology of Social Situations
AP Psychology > Unit 4: Social Psychology and Personality
55 cards
OCR GCSE Psychology
2567 cards
3.3 Animal Studies of Attachment
AQA A-Level Psychology > 3. Attachment
33 cards
AQA GCSE Psychology
1687 cards
3.4.1 Learning Theory of Attachment
AQA A-Level Psychology > 3. Attachment > 3.4 Explanations of Attachment
37 cards
7.1.1 Bowlby's Theory of Attachment
Edexcel A-Level Psychology > Unit 7: Child Psychology > 7.1 Attachment
77 cards
7.1.3 Cultural Variations in Attachment
Edexcel A-Level Psychology > Unit 7: Child Psychology > 7.1 Attachment
49 cards
Edexcel GCSE Psychology
3382 cards
3.9 Influence of Early Attachment on Later Relationships
AQA A-Level Psychology > 3. Attachment
68 cards
Unit 2: Cognitive Psychology
Edexcel A-Level Psychology
464 cards
1.1 Understanding the Rhetorical Situation
AP English Language and Composition > Unit 1: Rhetorical Situation
39 cards
AQA A-Level Psychology
10022 cards
Unit 5: Clinical Psychology
Edexcel A-Level Psychology
681 cards
Unit 6: Criminological Psychology
Edexcel A-Level Psychology
629 cards
Unit 1: Social Psychology
Edexcel A-Level Psychology
614 cards
12.6 Titration Curves
Edexcel A-Level Chemistry > Topic 12: Acid-Base Equilibria
69 cards
5.1 Introduction to Health Psychology
AP Psychology > Unit 5: Mental and Physical Health
68 cards
3.6 Cultural Variations in Attachment
AQA A-Level Psychology > 3. Attachment
66 cards
3.1 Caregiver-Infant Interactions
AQA A-Level Psychology > 3. Attachment
70 cards